A friend mine rented everything he could. Bikes, motorcycles, skis, motorhomes, campers, camping gear, etc. So he usually had the newest model too. So how did it work out? Retired at 49 as a multi-millionaire. All the money he saved by not buying toys he invested. His first job was washing cars at a dealership. Over the years he got promotions at the dealership, which was the only company he ever worked for.

The point of that article is to not buy stuff you won't use. If you buy something, you want to wear it out.

Buying stuff is like a drug. You get a high anticipating the package arriving. Caressing it. Isn't it pretty? Then you use it once, the high fades, and you have to buy some new thing to satisfy your addicition.

Interesting that Nick is arguing the liberal position and I'm arguing the conservative position...

my running training log keeps track of miles logged per pair of shoes, also lets you enter price paid and then will keep track of cost/mile, most almost to be retired (4th pair) Sabino Trails are at 606 miles w/ a cost of .08/mile- I wish I could say that about all my gear :)

its not the gear that matters but what and how much you do with it ...

in climbing those who start out with a single pair of shoes, a single harness, a single set of cams and nuts, a single rope ... are those i find usually climb the most and the hardest when they start out .... because all their money is spent on going to do actual climbing

eventually you will accumulate more gear of course ...

but gear isnt what makes you any better ... going out and practicing the skills over and over again will ... and the more you use the gear (in real life, gear lists on BPL dont count) ... the lower your cost per use will be